WhoRunsGov

Arne Duncan

Secretary of Education (since January 2009)

(Sarah L. Voisin/TWP)

Why He Matters

Education is an issue that divides the Democratic Party: on merit pay, teachers unions, standardized test scores and school closings. As President Barack Obama's pick for education secretary, Duncan is considered a pragmatist on those controversial issues. "He is seen as this consensus candidate between the two wings of the Democratic Party - the reformers and the establishment, the teachers' union group," said Michael Petrilli, a vice president at the Fordham Institute who served in the Department of Education from 2001 to 2005. "Everyone is seeing in him what they want to believe."

Education has always been a personal crusade for Duncan, who grew up tutoring kids (and being tutored by others) at his mother's after-school program on the South Side of Chicago. He wrote his undergraduate thesis on America's underclass and mentored children while playing professional basketball in Australia. At the press conference when Obama announced Duncan as his pick for education secretary, Duncan called schooling "the civil rights issue of our generation." He has spent most of this decade as the CEO of the Chicago Public School system, the third-largest in the country.

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At a Glance

  • Career History: Chief executive of Chicago Public Schools (since 2001); Deputy chief of staff to Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas (1998 to 2001); Ariel Capital Management (1992 to 1998)
  • Hometown: Chicago, Ill.
  • Alma Mater: Harvard, B.A. (sociology), 1987
  • Spouse: Karen
  • Web site
 

Path to Power

Duncan grew up in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago. His father was a psychology professor at the University of Chicago and his mother ran an after-school center in North Kenwood. Duncan went to the prestigious Lab School at the University of Chicago, but he grew up at the Sue Duncan Children's Center on Chicago's South Side, playing basketball, tutoring and being tutored by the students there.

His experience on the South Side shaped his perspectives on the importance of education. "Having friends from the progam and from the streets die when I was twelve, thirteen - that scarred me," he told The New Yorker. "As much as the success storeis have shaped me and given me hope, those deaths might be an even bigger motivator. The guys who got killed, were the guys who didn't finish high school. It was literally the dividing line between you lie and you die. Nobody who went to college died young."

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The Issues

Obama has always talked big on education. On the campaign trail, he spoke of $10 billion for early-childhood education and more money to recruit "an army of new teachers." He has publicly supported charter schools and merit pay for teachers, both ideas that Duncan implemented in Chicago. "If pay for performance works then that's something we should explore. If charter schools work, let's try that," Obama said.

Duncan shares this pragmatic approach to education reform. He experimented with incentive pay for students who got good grades and had good attendance. He didn't hesitate to close failing Chicago public schools, even though he was criticized because they were located in poor, mostly black neighborhoods. And he forced teachers to re-apply for their jobs, even though the decision was deplored by teachers' unions. Nine months after assuming the reins of Chicago's schools, Duncan had closed three schools. But he opened more than 75 new ones, most of them charter schools, during his seven years on the job.

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The Network

Duncan is a member of Obama's tight-knit circle of Chicago friends.

He was introduced to the group by his childhood friend, John W. Rogers Jr., an Obama adviser and the ex-husband to Desiree Rogers, Obama's former White House social secretary. John Rogers and Duncan both went to the University of Chicago Lab School, and Duncan calls Rogers his best friend and the most influential person in his life other than his parents.

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Campaign Contributions

Duncan donated $2,000 to Barack Obama in the 2008 election cycle and $3,000 to the Democratic National Committee. His wife gave Obama $4,600, the maximum allowable, in the 2008 elections.

 

Additional Resources

  1. Rossi, Rosalind, "School CEO plays to win," Chicago Sun-Times, June 2, 2002
  2. "B+ for the new boy," The Economist, Dec. 18, 2008
  3. Henderson, Nia-Malika, "Arne Duncan gives tough love to teachers," Politico, July 2, 2009
  4. Center for Responsive Politics
  5. Nason, David, "Gillard to play ball with Obama's education chief," The Australian, Dec. 18, 2008
  6. Khadaroo, Stacy Teicher, "For Obama, split looms over education reform," Christian Science Monitor, Dec. 18, 2008
  7. Rossi, Rosalind, and Spielman, Fran, "Duncan's past rooted in education," Chicago Sun-Times, June 27, 2001
  8. Anderson, Nick, "Administration pushes to rework No Child Left Behind law," Washington Post, Jan. 28, 2010
  9. Spielman, Fran and Rossi, Rosalind, "New chief: Untested, unblemished, unfazed," Chicago Sun-Times, June 27, 2001
  10. Rotella, Carlo, "Class Warrior," New Yorker, Feb. 1, 2010
  11. Wright, Gerald, "Former basketballer moves to centre court on Obama's team," The Age (Melbourne, Australia), Dec. 17, 2008
  12. Janega, James and Sadovi, Carlos, "Arne Duncan to join Obama cabinet," Chicago Tribune, Dec. 16, 2008;
  13. Whorunsgov.com interview with Arne Duncan
  14. The Monitor's editorial board, "Obama's can-do education pick," Christian Science Monitor, Dec. 19, 2008
  15. "School's out forever; Certain poor black schools are sitting on some might promising real estate. How convenient that enrollment's down too," Chicago Reader, June 18, 2004;
  16. Gensheimer, Lydia, "Obama's choice of Duncan wins praise from educators, lawmakers," Congressional Quarterly Today, Dec. 16, 2008
  17. Rossi, Rosalind, "School CEO plays to win," Chicago Sun-Times, June 2, 2002;
  18. Biography of Arne Duncan on the Chicago Public Schools official Web site
  19. Gensheimer, Lydia, "Obama's choice of Duncan wins praise from educators, lawmakers," Congressional Quarterly Today, CQ Staff, Dec. 16, 2008
  20. Malone, Tara and Sadovi, Carlos, "Head of the class; City school reformer goes national," Chicago Tribune, Dec. 17, 2008